First you have to check is your fan really broken.If it is not broken, than youhave to check whether you installed power management, acpi and lm-sensors packages.ACPI is possible to check during setup of your comp after installation of packages.

I've been meaning to write a Toshiba laptop HOW-TO. This is a great example of why.

VL does NOT recognize that you're running a Toshiba laptop the way some other distros (I.e.: Ubuntu Edgy, Mandriva) do. You need to add the following lines to your /etc/rc.d/rc.modules file to enable the necessary kernel modules at boot:

The toshiba and toshiba_acpi modules are the really important ones. Make sure you put this somewhere in rc.modules where it's unconditionally executed (not in an if stanza). You can enable these modules in your current session by executing the modprobe commands in a terminal window as root.

I'd also recommend installing the toshutils and toshset packages, both located in our Extra repository. toshutils has a fan command that will work on your laptop, both for displaying your fan status and for forcing it on if you feel it's necessary.

i have pretty much the same problem, but already at the installation process. when starting up, the fan runs as i expect him to, even with all the live-cd's i tested it's working well on my pentium II 400 with 196mb ram. after choosing the boot kernel (tried "linux" and "linux2") at the vl-5.8 gold standard installation procedure it stops and some message saying that the temperature is critical appears and the pc shuts down.is there a chance to install it anyway?

I think you need to find out what kernel modules are needed for your computer, start from the console, insert the proper modules with the modprobe command and then re-start the install script. I am not an expert on those things, but if you post the exact model of your computer, I am sure some members of the forum could help you to find the modules and finish the install.Good Luck!

Logged

"There is a concept which corrupts and upsets all others. I refer not to Evil, whose limited realm is that of ethics; I refer to the infinite."Jorge Luis Borges, Avatars of the Tortoise. --Jumalauta!!

I had this problem of power management turning off the fan during boot on a desktop computer. The workaround was to disable both ACPI and APM, then to manually enable APM by appending etc/lilo.conf

Try disabling ACPI in BIOS, see if the fan still cuts off. If fan still cuts off, then disable APM in BIOS also, if BIOS has setting for APM.

If that works, then you will probably have to append lilo.conf for shutdown issues.

Overview: To resolve this issue, you pass power management responsibilities (initialization?) from firmware to software. It's possible that the BIOS firmware conflicts (competes) with the kernel for control in this circumstance, causing power management to be abandoned by both during boot, ie., the fan stops.

Any luck, LinuxNT?

When you get around to editing lilo.conf, I'll give you more assistance.

You probably don't want to leave the testing repository permanently enabled in your /etc/slapt-get/slapt-getrc file. As the name implies these are packages that aren't fully tested yet and if you do an automated upgrade you'll likely get packages that will cause breakage. Extra and patches as the ones you want to leave enabled.

You probably don't want to leave the testing repository permanently enabled in your /etc/slapt-get/slapt-getrc file. As the name implies these are packages that aren't fully tested yet and if you do an automated upgrade you'll likely get packages that will cause breakage. Extra and patches as the ones you want to leave enabled.

Thank you for that, caitlyn. I'd seen that mentioned before in these forums; I'll yank testing out of there.

My delema right now is getting suspend to work at the instant I close the lid on the laptop the way it didwith Vista.

[EDIT] Also, I just discovered that my fan does not run in Vector at all! I have acpi and lmsensors installed.